Long on atmosphere but
short on logic, Images is the closest
thing to a pure horror movie that Robert Altman ever made. Telling the story of
a woman who suffers delusions while succumbing to paranoia and other mental
problems, the picture feels a bit like the indulgences of someone making their
first forays into the world of psychology. The pathology is a bit too tidy, the
symbolism is a bit too obvious, and the violent climaxes are a bit too predictable.
Nonetheless, the contributions of world-class collaborators compensate for the
shortcomings of the script, which Altman wrote, and the piece has a certain
lingering power.
Set in a remote British countryside, the picture opens by
introducing viewers to Cathryn (Susannah York), a children’s-book author who
spends lonely days inside a sprawling mansion that’s miles away from other
houses. Through dreamlike imagery rendered with sly edits and supple camera
moves—as well as an elaborate soundtrack comprising atmospheric music,
multilayered voice-overs, and otherworldly sound effects—Altman puts across the
idea that Cathryn is the victim of her own overactive imagination. She accepts
phone calls that may or may not be real, in which strangers and friends suggest
that Cathryn’s husband is unfaithful, and she hears noises that may or may not
emanate from invaders in her home. Later, when Cathryn’s foul-mouthed and
foul-tempered businessman husband, Hugh (Rene Auberjonois), returns home from
work, Cathryn embraces him until she hallucinates that he’s actually a
different man. The person whom she “sees” is Rene (Marcel Bozzufi), a former
lover who died. You get the idea—Images
is a tightly contained story about one woman spiraling into madness.
Altman has
great fun with the possibilities created by this set-up, especially when he
employs carefully planned editing to generate illusions; in one creepy scene,
Cathryn stands on a high hilltop, then looks down into the valley below and
sees herself, looking back up to the figure on the hilltop. Trippy! The problem
with this sort of story, of course, is that anything can happen and nothing has
real consequence. After all, couldn’t the whole movie be a dream? Picture the
endless cycle of an Escher print, and you’ve got the vibe.
Within those
parameters, however, Altman and his collaborators do some wonderful things.
John Williams, no stranger to composing suspenseful movie scores, gives even
the most obtuse scenes real emotional edge, while Stormu Yamashita (credited
with creating “sounds”) complements Williams’ melodies with unnerving aural
jolts. Cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond, continuing some of the bold visual
explorations that he and Altman began with McCabe
& Mrs. Miller (1971), employs fluid camera moves and probing zooms to
fill the screen with movement, helping Altman achieve an overall sense of
disquiet. And while York gives a passionate, uninhibited performance, the title
sets expectations appropriately—this one’s more about images than people,
because the characters are merely colors on Altman’s palette. Ultimately much
more satisfying as an exhibition of film craft than as a simulacrum of
storytelling, Images is a beguiling
oddity that stands apart from the rest of Altman’s work.
Images:
FUNKY
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